© 2026 GlobalCapital, Derivia Intelligence Limited, company number 15235970, 4 Bouverie Street, London, EC4Y 8AX. Part of the Delinian group. All rights reserved.

Accessibility | Terms of Use | Privacy Policy | Modern Slavery Statement | Event Participant Terms & Conditions

CMBS

Latest news

Latest news

Deutsche Bank predicts $155bn of private sector CMBS
◆ Data centres: crunch time for Europe's capital markets ◆ How AI is changing capital markets work... ◆ ... and hiring
Single asset, single borrower deals drove the US CMBS market in 2025, particularly on New York City collateral as office attendance rose. With interest rates predicted to fall further in 2026, market participants are looking forward to a greater variety of deals on commercial real estate from other cities and sectors, writes Pooja Sarkar

More articles

  • Luxembourg-based BGP Investment S.à r.l. is said to be closing a new EUR386 million ($514.7 million) privately-placed German multifamily commercial mortgage securitization, which refinances Quokka Finance Plc, a legacy EUR617.5 million ($822.6 million) CMBS from 2006 scheduled to mature earlier this month.
  • ING Bank Australia priced the second prime Aussie residential mortgage securitization from its IDOL program on Monday.
  • European CMBS issuance is forecasted to reach €6.5bn this year — over double the €3.2bn in 2012 — but most outstanding loans are unlikely to be refinanced in the CMBS market, said Standard & Poor’s this week.
  • New-issue European commercial mortgage-backed securities are forecast to reach EUR6.5 billion ($8.68 billion) for year-end—over double that of 2012’s total of EUR3.2 billion ($4.28 billion)—but Standard & Poor’s analysts warn the “vast majority” of outstanding loans in the region are unlikely to be refinanced via the CMBS market.
  • German property company Gagfah is considering using a CMBS to refinance three multi-family housing portfolios from its NILEG subgroup ahead of the loans’ April 2014 maturity date.
  • ING Bank Australia is lining up the second prime Aussie residential mortgage securitization from its IDOL program this year.
  • Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac have launched the sale of a $155.2 million bidlist of multifamily-backed bonds from 2006-2008 vintages as part of a larger sales program mandated by the Federal Housing Finance Agency.
  • Normandy Mortgage Loan Company has tapped Wells Fargo to sell a $172 million residential mortgage-backed securities deal backed by non-performing loans later this week.
  • German property company Gagfah is considering using a commercial mortgage-backed securities deal to refinance three multi-family housing portfolios from its NILEG subgroup ahead of the loans’ April 2014 maturity date.